AUTHOR=Fonteyne Simon , Silva Avendaño Columba , Ramos Sanchez Angel , Torres Zambrano Juan Pablo , García Dávila Fernando , Pérez Martínez Zenaida , García Dávila Alejandrina , Castillo Villaseñor Luis , Verhulst Nele
TITLE=Innovating Traditional Production Systems Through On-Farm Conservation Agriculture and Agroforestry Research
JOURNAL=Frontiers in Agronomy
VOLUME=3
YEAR=2022
URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/agronomy/articles/10.3389/fagro.2021.787507
DOI=10.3389/fagro.2021.787507
ISSN=2673-3218
ABSTRACT=
Maize (Zea mays L.), the staple crop of Mexico, is often produced by smallholder farmers on sloping terrains. Historically, little agronomic research has been performed under the conditions of these farmers to support them in the sustainable intensification of their production systems. We set up trials at two locations in the state of Oaxaca to evaluate conservation agriculture and agroforestry in collaboration with local farmers. Crop diversification through crop rotations, multicropping, relay cropping or agroforestry increased system yields the most, by up to 1.4 t ha−1 in Teopoxco and 1.7 t ha−1 in Tamazulapam. Increased input use through increased fertilization or liming did not increase profitability enough to justify their use. Zero tillage and residue retention increased yields and reduced production costs. Conservation agriculture with agroforestry was a high-yielding, profitable system that also reduced farmers' risk by providing several harvests per year. The most profitable combinations of agroforestry and conservation agriculture could produce up to $4,854 USD ha−1 in Teopoxco and $2,143 USD ha−1 in Tamazulapam, while the control treatments in the same sites and years produced $175 USD ha−1 and $92 USD ha−1 respectively. In several years the main crop failed, while the trees were able to produce due to their different growing season compared to maize. Through adaptive investigation under farmers' conditions, sustainable intensification of traditional production system is possible with low-cost changes that are locally adapted and within farmers' possibilities.